stage had clearly seen action. He stared at it as Lias patiently stacked up his stones.
âOh, just a bit of fruit and old eggs,â said Glod. âPeople probably get a bit boisterous. I shouldnât worry about that.â
âIâm not worried about it,â said Imp.
âI should think not.â
âItâs the axe marks and arrow holles Iâm worried about. Gllod, we havenât even practised! Not properlly!â
âYou can play your guitar, canât you?â
âWellll, yes, I suppose . . .â
Heâd tried it out. It was easy to play. In fact, it was almost impossible to play badly. It didnât seem to matter how he touched the strings â they still rang out the tune he had in mind. It was, in solid form, the kind of instrument you dream about when you first start to play â the one you can play without learning. He remembered when heâd first picked up a harp and struck the strings, confidently expecting the kind of lambent tones the old men coaxed from them. Heâd got a discord instead. But this was the instrument heâd dreamed of . . .
âWeâll stick to numbers everyone knows,â said the dwarf. ââThe Wizardâs Staffâ and âGathering Rhubarbâ. Stuff like that. People like songs they can snigger along to.â
Imp looked down at the bar. It was filling up a bit now. But his attention was drawn to a large orang-utan, which had pulled up its chair right in front of the stage and was holding a bag of fruit.
âGllod, thereâs an ape watching us.â
âWell?â said Glod, unfolding a string bag.
âItâs an ape .â
âThis is Ankh-Morpork. Thatâs how things are here.â Glod removed his helmet and unfolded something from inside.
âWhyâve you got a string bag?â said Imp.
âFruitâs fruit. Waste not, want not. If they throw eggs, try to catch them.â
Imp slung the guitarâs strap over his shoulder. Heâd tried to tell the dwarf, but what could he say: this is too easy to play?
He hoped there was a god of musicians.
And there is. There are many, one for almost every type of music. Almost every type. But the only one due to watch over Imp that night was Reg, god of club musicians, who couldnât pay much attention because heâd also got three other gigs to do.
âWe ready?â said Lias, picking his hammers.
The others nodded.
âLetâs give âem âThe Wizardâs Staffâ, then,â said Glod. âThat always breaks the ice.â
âOK,â said the troll. He counted on his fingers. âOne, two . . . one, two, many, lots .â
The first apple was thrown seven seconds later. It was caught by Glod, who didnât miss a note. But the first banana curved viciously and grounded in his ear.
âKeep playing!â he hissed.
Imp obeyed, ducking a fusillade of oranges.
In the front row, the ape opened his bag and produced a very large melon.
âCan you see any pears?â said Glod, taking a breath. âI like pears.â
âI can see a man with a throwing axe!â
âDoes it look valuable?â
An arrow vibrated in the wall by Liasâs head.
It was three in the morning. Sergeant Colon and Corporal Nobbs were reaching the conclusion that anyone who intended to invade Ankh-Morpork probably wasnât going to do so now. And there was a good fire back in the watch house.
âWe could leave a note,â said Nobby, blowing on his fingers. âYou know? Come back tomorrow, sort of thing?â
He looked up. A solitary horse was walking under the gate arch. A white horse, with a sombre, black-clad rider.
There was no question of âHalt, who goes there?â The night watch walked the streets at strange hours and had become accustomed to seeing things not generally seen by mortal men.
Sergeant Colon touched his helmet
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